Holocaust oh my god this is my aunt alice lok cahana makes up another story

Alice Lok Cahana (born February 7, 1929, in Sárvár, Hungary) is a Hungarian Holocaust survivor. She was a teenage inmate in the Auschwitz-Birkenau, Guben and Bergen-Belsen camps. She is most well known for her writings and abstract paintings about the Holocaust. Her work celebrates Judaism and those who perished in the Holocaust by transforming the horror of their deaths into a testament to their lives. As she told Barbara Rose in the "From Ashes to the Rainbow" catalog interview, "I started to paint only about the Holocaust as a tribute and memorial to those who did not return, and I am still not finished."

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Early life

Alice Lok Cahana was born in Sárvár, Hungary in 1929. She first learned to draw in a Jewish high school (Jews were forbidden to attend public schools at the time). In 1944 she and her entire family were was transported to Auschwitz as part of the massive deportation of Hungarian Jews. While interned at Gruben concentration camp Cahana made her first work of art when the Nazis challenged the children to decorate the barracks for Christmas. In an interview with art historian Cahana explained, "There were no paper or pencils to make decorations; we practically had nothing except one broom to sweep the floor with. We were about 24 children in our barrack. I decided we should choreograph ourselves into a living candelabra and hold the pieces of the broom as a part of this sculpture. We won a prize - each of us a little can of snails."

Cahana was liberated from Bergen-Belsen on April 15, 1945, where she was one of the few who survived. After the war, she lived in Sweden from 1952 to 1957 and then immigrated to the United States and settled in Houston, Texas in 1959 where she has since made her home.

Art career

Cahana's formal art education began once she settled in Houston. She studied at the University of Houston and at Rice University, where color field painting was the dominant style. Her exposure to the works of Helen Frankenthaler, Morris Louis, and Kenneth Noland, color field painters collected by the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, all contributed to the development of her mature style. When Cahana initially came to America she "wanted to paint like this wonderful country, all bright colors, all happiness. I wanted everything smooth and seamless." But in 1978 she made the pivotal decision to return to Hungary and visit her birthplace where nothing remained of the Jewish community she had known. That there was no memorial to the vast numbers of Jews who had once played an important social, cultural, and economic role in Hungarian society, who had been dragged from their homes and sent to Nazi death camps, shocked her to the point that she felt she could no longer paint abstractions.

After her return from Hungary Cahana's she began to create work through a new kind of mark-making, employing collage, along with an abstract visual language that could more directly express her memorial to the dead. She believed that her work had to be about the transcendence of the human spirit, the triumph of human spirituality over inhuman evil.[2] In an effort to make certain that no one could explain her imagery as simply fantasies of an artistic imagination she used literal photographs and documents: factual evidence that could not be disputed. It was during this period that she created a series dedicated to Raoul Wallenberg, the Swedish diplomat who handed out fake passports to Jews targeted for the death camps, saving more than 20,000 people, including Cahana's father. Some of these faded passports were incorporated into the series as collage elements.

Additional works include newspaper clippings, photographs, pages from her mother's prayer book, and yellow stars.The surface of her carefully structured compositions are subject to various processes: burned, scratched, stained with blood red pigment; the images are grafted, buried, partially eaten away.

In 2006, her piece No Names was added to the Vatican Museum's Collection of Modern Religious Art and since then is on permanent display at the museum in Rome, Italy. Her work appears in multiple prestigious museum collections around the world including Yad Vashem, the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, the Skirball Museum at Los Angeles: Hebrew Union College, and the Center for Holocaust and Genocide Studies at the University of Minnesota.

In media

Cahana was one of five Hungarian Holocaust survivors whose story was featured in the Steven Spielberg 1999 Academy Award-winning documentary movie, The Last Days. Her writing was featured in "The Best Spiritual Writing 2011" and she is also featured in Auschwitz: The Nazis and the Final Solution. She was photographed in her studio for New York photographer Mark Seliger's book and exhibition "When They Came to Take My Father" and was also written about in Michael Berenbaum's book "A Promise To Remember" as well as in the writings of art critic Barbara Rose.

Personal life

Cahana married Rabbi Moshe Cahana in Israel. They emigrated to Sweden where their first son, Rabbi Ronnie Cahana, was born. They finally settled in Houston where Rabbi Michael Cahana and Rina Cahana were born. She has resided in Houston since 1959.